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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!ohstpy!mecsys!oecn_michael
- Newsgroups: rec.music.folk
- Subject: Re: The Battle of Alma
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.092640.763@mec.ohio.gov>
- From: oecn_michael@mec.ohio.gov
- Date: 22 Dec 92 09:26:40 -0500
- Organization: Metrop. Educ. Council, Columbus, OH
- Lines: 141
-
- >Subject: help with lyrics - heights of alma
- >Message-ID: <20121@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu>
- >From: darsie@eecs.ucdavis.edu (Richard Darsie)
- >Date: 14 Dec 92 23:17:50 GMT
- >Sender: usenet@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu
- >Organization: University of California, Davis
- >
- >Well, I've been learning this one off a tape of Margaret Christl.
- >The subject matter of the song is definitely non-PC: an extremely
- >jingoistic recounting of a Crimean War battle from the British
- >point of view - but the tune is just so incredibly infectious
- >and energetic that I've decided to learn it anyway. There are
- >a few lines of lyrics which I can't make out, so if anyone in
- >netland can help I'd appreciate it. There are several whole
- >lines which I've left blank, and I've put question marks by
- >lines where I'm unsure of what I heard.
- >
- >Thanks in advance,
- >
- >Richard
- >darsie@eecs.ucdavis.edu
- >
- >The Heights of Alma
- >[Trad.]
-
-
- September ........ on the eighteenth day
- [On September last the eighteenth day]
- We were landed safe in the big Crimay
- In spite of all the burning spray
- To cheer our hearts for Alma.
- That night we lay on the cold, cold ground,
- Not a shelter to be found;
- In the rain we almost drowned
- On the heights of Alma.
-
- Britain's sons may long remember
- The glorious 20th of September.
- We caused the Russians to surrender
- On the heights of Alma.
-
- Next morn the scorching sun did rise
- In the east, in the cloudy skies.
- ......
- [Our noble chief, Lord Raglan, cries]
- Prepare to march for Alma.
- And when their sights were held in view,
- [Oh, when the heights we hove in view,]
- Stepped as hard it would subdue (????)
- [The stoutest heart it could subdue]
- To see the Russians' warlike crew
- On the heights of Alma.
-
- Britain's sons may long remember...
-
- Their cities were well fortified,
- Battlements all lit besides.
- .....
- [Our noble chief, Lord Raglan, cries]
- We'll get our work at Alma.
- [We'll get hot work at Alma]
- Their shot it flew like winter rain
- As we the battlements tried to gain.
- Fifteen hundred Frenchmen slain
- In the blood and gore at Alma.
-
- Britain's sons may long remember...
-
- Our Scottish lads with swords in hands
- Were not last, as you may surmise.
- Gallantly they faced their foes
- To gain the heights of Alma.
- To Sevastapol the Russians fled
- Leaving the wounded and the dead.
- Rivers there they ran with red
- >From the blood that spilled at Alma.
-
- Britain's sons may long remember...
-
- Two hundred Frenchmen I heard say (????)
- [There was fifteen hundred Frenchmen I heard say]
- Died upon that fateful day.
- But 1800 Russians lay
- In the blood and gore at Alma.
- France and England, hand in hand,
- Was no foe could them withstand.
- Let it run throughout the land
- Of the victory gained at Alma.
-
- Britain's sons may long remember...
-
-
- Beginning at Our Scottish lads with swords in hands... I have the following:
-
- Our Scottish lads in kilt and hose
- Were not the last you may suppose,
- But daring faced their daring foes
- And gained the heights of Alma.
-
- To Sebastopol the Russians fled
- They left their wounded and their dead;
- The rivers there that they run red
- From the blood was spilled at Alma.
-
- There was fifteen hundred Frenchmen I heard say
- Had fell upon that fatal day,
- And eighteen hundred Russians lay
- In the bloody gore at Alma.
-
- From orphans' eyes the tears do roll,
- And none the widows can console;
- While parents mourn beyond control
- For the sons they lost at Alma.
-
- And many a pretty maid does mourn
- Her lover who will ne'er return;
- By cruel war he's from her torn,
- His body lies at Alma.
-
- Now France and Britain, hand in hand,
- What foe on earth could them withstand?
- So let it run throughout the land,
- The victory won at Alma.
-
-
- I obtained the words from THE RAMBLING SOLDIER, edited by Roy Palmer, Penquin
- Books, 1977. The edition I have is a Peacock Book which notes it was
- simultaneously published in hardback by Kestrel Books. I have many of Mr.
- Palmer's books and highly recommend them. Mr. Palmer indicates that the words
- are from a Mr. Ben Henneberry of Devil's Island, Newfoundland as well as some
- verses added from a broadside issued by C. Sanderson of Edinburgh. The words
- you have seem less formal in tone to those printed in the Palmer book. There
- are many minor differences. Mr. Palmer clarifies that the "Scottish lads"
- mentioned "comprised the Camerons, the 93rd Highlanders (later called the
- Argyll and Sutherlands) and the Black Watch" and that, in actual casualties,
- "The British lost 2,000 killed and wounded, the French, 1,300, and the
- Russians, over 5,000."
-
- Mr. Palmer notes in the discography recordings on Leader LEA4048 and Topic
- 12TS209. I have never heard the song sung myself and from your description of
- the tune as energetic, I wondered if you might describe the pace of it?
-